Laura H. Rhodes retweetledi
Laura H. Rhodes
6.9K posts

Laura H. Rhodes
@LHRhodes
Associate Professor/Safety & HR Consultant,SMI Regulatory Consultant, OCC & Bethany Lax, Mom, Math, HOH *Posts are not endorsements of products or services*
Katılım Ocak 2012
610 Takip Edilen293 Takipçiler
Laura H. Rhodes retweetledi
Laura H. Rhodes retweetledi

The CPDC is looking for student organizations or groups to partner up with this fall! The best thing is - we do all the work while you just promote and attend the event with your club, team or Greek society.
Check it out! Scan the QR code to sign up!
#IUPStartsCareers

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Laura H. Rhodes retweetledi
Laura H. Rhodes retweetledi

IUP posts a gritty 20-17 road win at Lock Haven on Saturday night! The Hawks improve to 2-0 on the season with the victory.
#ALLIN24

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Laura H. Rhodes retweetledi

@IUPCrimsonHawk Athletes -high performers on & off the field! Gavin McGinn 🏃♂️ and Dan Rice 🏈 #IUPsafety

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Laura H. Rhodes retweetledi
Laura H. Rhodes retweetledi
Laura H. Rhodes retweetledi
Laura H. Rhodes retweetledi

Take advantage of the CPDC’s mock interview program, available throughout the academic year. It’s an excellent opportunity to hone your interview skills and prepare to shine in your next interview!
#MockInterviewProgram #MockInterview #IUPCPDC #IUPStartsCareers

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Laura H. Rhodes retweetledi

Sharing as example of positioning device (versus personal fall arrest system) #FallProtection
Science girl@sciencegirl
Plane door close and final checks twitter.com/visualfeastwan…
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Laura H. Rhodes retweetledi
Laura H. Rhodes retweetledi
Laura H. Rhodes retweetledi
Laura H. Rhodes retweetledi

Here’s one of the most fascinating child development videos I’ve ever shared.
As your baby learns language, they begin by approximating the examples you set.
After a period of early experimentation with sound (including cries, coos and gurgles), infants begin babbling - making speech-like sounds (which often include components of conventional speech) that are - nonetheless - not yet conventionally meaningful.
This babbling phase is a precursor to the use of formal words. And it happens in all languages.
Including sign language.
This video shows an infant (who, by the way, is not hearing impaired) “babbling” to her deaf grandparents.
As they sign to her, she responds in kind, using her hands to approximate the signed communication that they are modeling.
It’s a whole serve and return conversation, just as if they were conversing verbally.
If you’ll watch carefully, you’ll note distinct turn taking.
And - interestingly - that with her grandparents she largely avoids vocalizations, in favor of gesture.
What a treat to see this rich example of bilingual language development.
This fascinating video was shared to TT by mara_mccullough.
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